Burton Mail

Landlords turn the screw with tenant evictions

- By JEMMA CREW editorial@burtonmail.co.uk

ALMOST 6,000 landlords in England started court proceeding­s against tenants in the first three months of 2022 after serving them a so-called ‘no-fault’ eviction notice, figures show.

Some 5,890 landlords started accelerate­d procedure claims between January and March after issuing renters with a Section 21 notice, according to figures published by the Ministry of Justice (MOJ).

This is up 63 per cent on the previous quarter and 41 per cent compared to the same period in 2020, before the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Overall, 18,626 eviction claims were made to courts by social and private landlords in the first three months of 2022.

This is up 32 per cent from the last three months of 2021, but is down by around a fifth compared to the same period in 2020.

For people in East Staffordsh­ire, fortunatel­y, the issue is relatively minimal. In 2021, there were three Section 21 notice cases out of 73 across Staffordsh­ire. However, in 2020, the figure for the county was just 32, so Section 21 evictions more than doubled over a year. When the pandemic hit in 2020, measures were introduced to protect tenants in the private rental system from losing their homes. These included a temporary ban on evictions, which was lifted from May 2021.

The MOJ said bailiffs are working through the backlog of repossessi­on claims and other action dating back to the beginning of the pandemic, and that numbers are expected to continue “rising steadily” throughout the year.

The Government first pledged to scrap no-fault evictions in 2019. Earlier this month in the Queen’s Speech, it said it will introduce a Renters Reform Bill to protect private renters and abolish no-fault evictions.

Shelter chief executive Polly Neate said every minute wasted puts another renter at risk.

She said: “It’s alarming that as the living cost crisis rages, more landlords are kicking tenants out of their homes.

“These are real people whose lives are being turned upside down and simply cannot afford to lose their homes right now.”

Matt Downie, chief executive of Crisis, said it is “unacceptab­le” that the Government is allowing more people to be forced from their homes.

He said: “While families across the country battle to keep roofs over their heads, government inaction over the spiralling costs of energy, rent and food is causing more and more people to be sucked into this crisis.

“To prevent unthinkabl­e numbers of people being pushed into homelessne­ss, we urge the Government to make good on their pledge to scrap ‘no-fault’ Section 21 notices as quickly as possible, as well as unfreezing housing benefit so it covers the true cost of renting.

“More dither and delay will lead to more households being forced into making impossible decisions as their budgets are squeezed to breaking point.”

A spokesman for the National Residentia­l Landlords Associatio­n said: “It was inevitable that there would be an increase in cases heard by the courts in both the private and social housing sectors given the backlog following the repossessi­on ban during the pandemic. It is vital that such cases are now heard in a timely fashion and in a way that is fair to both tenants and responsibl­e landlords.”

It’s alarming that as the living cost crisis rages, more landlords are kicking tenants out of their homes. Shelter

 ?? By their landlords ?? Tenants can be evicted from their homes under Section 21 notices issued
News
By their landlords Tenants can be evicted from their homes under Section 21 notices issued News

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